A Thunderbolt from the sky..A thunderbolt that could make change.A Thunderbolt that will tear apart the black clouds of imperialism and communalism that had covered India.Yes change is inevitable..Change will Come..

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

Japanese Communist
Party leader Kazuo Shii, right, smiles as he shakes hands with Tadayoshi
Ichida, the party’s vice chair at the party’s headquarters in Tokyo

In the House of Representatives general election held on December 14, the
Japanese Communist Party increased its number of seats to 21 from its
pre-election strength of eight. It gained support from voters averse to the ruling
coalition parties. The party won a seat in a single-seat
constituency race for the first time since the 1996 lower house
election, and took 20 in proportional representation blocs. The JCP is
now entitled to submit a bill unrelated to the budget, which requires a
minimum of 20 seats. It was also the first time that the party secured double-digit seats since the 2000 lower house election. Meanwhile, other minor opposition parties failed to increase the number
of their seats. The JCP clearly demonstrated a confrontational stance
against the ruling parties, raising objections to the consumption tax
hike and the restart of nuclear power plants.

The JCP won a single-seat constituency in
Okinawa where the party staged its fight in collaboration with all anti-U.S.
military base forces. Okinawans defeated all Liberal Democratic Party
candidates who supported the base construction and ran for the single-seat
constituencies in the prefecture.

The JCP obtained 20 proportional representation seats. In single-seat
constituencies in Okinawa, JCP candidate Akamine Seiken, who contested the
election with support from the People’s Life and Social Democratic parties, was
elected. The JCP achieved a victory in single-seat constituencies for the first
time since 1996.

The LDP decreased its number of seats by three to 291. It lost all of the four
single-seat blocs in Okinawa. However, as its coalition partner the Komei Party
added four seats to its pre-election strength of 31 seats, the ruling coalition
occupies over two-thirds of the seats in the Lower House.

The Democratic Party of Japan gained 11 seats held to total 73 seats. The Japan
Innovation Party (former the Japan Restoration Party) reduced its seats by one
to 41. The Party for Future Generations fell to two seats from 19. The People’s
Life Party lost three from its previous total of five. The SDP secured its
pre-election strength of two seats.

Shii comments on the election results

Japanese Communist Party Shii Kazuo on the evening of election day held a press
conference at the JCP Head Office in Tokyo, thanking every JCP member and
supporter who called on as many potential voters as possible to support the JCP
and JCP candidates.

As a brief review of the election campaign, Shii said, “Prime Minister Abe
Shinzo asserted that Abenomics is ‘the only way’ but quite a number of voters
felt that that might be a dangerous path to continue. We’ve never softened our
head-on stance against Abe’s runaway policies. This is why, I think, our party
gained so much support in the election this time.”

He also said that many voters showed their high regard for JCP counterproposals
presented during the election campaign dealing with economic and diplomatic
issues based on the people-first principle, and he expressed his determination
to fulfill the JCP election promise in the Diet with all the JCP lawmakers in
the House of Representatives and House of Councilors working in concert. The
party will keep up the pressure and will work to increase various single-issue
movements together with the general public, he added.

Regarding the election results in Okinawa, Shii said that it was an epoch-making
achievement beating all pro-base candidates running for the election from
Okinawa’s single-seat constituencies. He expressed his delight with JCP Akamine
Seiken’s victory in one of the four single-seat constituencies in Okinawa. He
extended his gratitude especially to all the Okinawans who strived for the
victory of the JCP candidate irrespective of whether they are conservatives or
progressives.

He gave a special thanks to Okinawa Governor Onaga Takeshi, Naha City Mayor
Shiroma Mikiko, local business leaders, and those in the former LDP faction
Shinpukai who were ousted from the LDP because they maintained their opposing
stance against a new U.S. base in Henoko, for their efforts.

He said that the government, if it is in a truly democratic country, should
listen to the demands of Okinawans as clearly shown in the election. To that
end, the JCP will work even harder to press the government to cancel the new
base construction plan and dismantle the Futenma base, he stressed.